http://law.jrank.org/pages/2858/Billy-Mitchell-Court-Martial-1925.html Defendant: Brigadier General William Mitchell Crime Charged: Insubordination and "conduct of a nature to bring discredit upon the military service" Chief Defense Lawyers: Frank G. Plain, Frank Reid, and Colonel Herbert A. White Chief Prosecutors: Major Allen W. Gullion, Lieutenant Joseph L. McMullen, and Colonel Sherman Moreland Judges: Major General Charles P. Summerall, Chief of the U.S. Army General Staff; Major Generals William S. Graves, Robert L. Howze, Douglas MacArthur, Benjamin A. Poore, and Fred W. Sladen; Brigadier Generals Ewing E. Booth, Albert L. Bowley, George Irwin, Edward K. King, Frank R. McCoy, and Edwin B. Winans; and Colonel Blanton Winship Place: Washington, D.C. Dates of Court-Martial: October 28-December 17, 1925 Verdict: Guilty Sentence: Suspension from rank, command, and duty with forfeiture of all pay and allowances for five years SIGNIFICANCE: The Billy Mitchell court-martial demonstrated not only that a prophet is without honor in his own country but that he is particularly unwelcome in the military. The longest and most controversial court martial in U.S. history, it came to epitomize the difficulty military strategists have in adapting to changing times and technologies. The cost of the country's resultant unpreparedness for World War II lies beyond reckoning.
Nineteen-year-old William Mitchell enlisted in the Army in 1898, at the outbreak of the Spanish-American War. By World War I, he had realized the significance of the airplane, put himself through flying school at his own expense, risen to the rank of colonel, and was chief of Air Service. Seeing the Army using the airplane at first only for observation and, later, to shoot at enemy planes, he was perplexed that strafing and bombing never occurred to the men who ran the war. He proposed to General John J. Pershing that troops be dropped behind German lines by plane and parachute "in order so to surprise the enemy by taking him from the rear that it would give our infantry an opening." Pershing found the idea impossible and absurd.
By the war's end, Mitchell was convinced that "Only an air force can fight an air force." Soon he had trained the first paratrooper, used the airplane for aerial mapping, developed the turbo booster and the variable-pitch propeller, predicted high-altitude flight where the thin atmosphere would permit speeds of 300 to 400 miles per hour, and mounted cannons on planes—ordnance not flown again until, ironically, it was mounted on the B-25 Mitchell bomber (named for Billy Mitchell) for Colonel Jimmy Doolittle's daring bombing of Tokyo early in World War II.
Declaring in 1921 that "the first battles of any future war will be air battles," Mitchell became an outspoken critic of the government's failure to develop the Air Service. When the House Naval Affairs Committee refused to let him demonstrate air power by bombing former German ships that had to be destroyed under the Armistice agreement, he went public, earning so many headlines nationwide with his descriptions of Navy vessels as "sitting ducks" that the House Appropriations Committee approved his plan.
Read more: Billy Mitchell Court-Martial: 1925http://law.jrank.org/pages/2858/Billy-Mitchell-Court-Martial-1925.html#ixzz0cc7iqn2y
Court Martial
Billy Mitchell:The Life, Times and Battles: pg. 206
"Mitchellism" (good header)
A letter from President Calvin Cooliage
"My Dear General Mitchell: Confirming m converstaion with you this morning, I do not know of any objection to your preparing some articles on aviation, so far as I am concerned. But, of course, I can not speak for your superior officers. The matter should be taken up with them and their decision in relation to the articles followed."
-Mitchell started as a general but was lowered to a private after his court martial
-he was known to have valor and discipline.
Quote from his sister (Ruth Mitchell) : "He died, our brother Bill his etiaph, I think, needs to be more than this: He was loyal, Never counting the capt."
-General Billy Mitchell foresaw many different individuals as having a natural appitude for flying: such as Edward vernon Richenbacker who was a racecar driver.
following used from: http://encyclopedia.stateuniversity.com/pages/2814/Billy-Mitchell.html "In France (Sep 1918) he commanded the largest concentration of aircraft (some 1500 warplanes) in aviation's brief history. In 1921 and 1923 he *energetically arranged for aircraft to demonstrate the potential of the new arm by sinking obsolete warships at sea, but unconvinced, the authorities continued to grade air power low on the priority list"
Mitchell strongly believed airpower was the last frontier and worked hard to prove this to his superiors.
The father of the U.S. Air Force
(article used fromhttp:www.warren.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123116182, The FE Warren Air force Base website) Posted 9/19/2008// by Michael Byrd
90th Missile Wing Historian
9/19/2008 - F.E. WARREN AFB, Wyo. -- As the Air Force moves back to basics, some service members may think of heritage, traditions and heroes. With respect and honor, most turn back the pages of time and look to the forefathers of the Air Force.
The accounts of their bravery remind people of the tradition they blazed: a tradition of courage and vision that created controversy and also inspired dreams.
Controversy, dreams and opinions made up the stormy career of the Air Force's first visionary, Army Brig. Gen. William 'Billy' Mitchell. From his first introduction to air power in 1906, he saw capabilities and strategies that most people in his time never imagined.
In 1910, Mitchell traveled overseas to review the Japanese, Chinese, Russian and Filipino armies. He returned after two years to Fort D.A. Russell, where he reported his findings to the Army Staff College. Mitchell pointed out the high probability of a United States war with Japan and the perilous defenses found in the Philippines.
His accounts were dismissed.
During World War I, Mitchell demonstrated both extraordinary administrative and war strategy skills. He first solved the problems of purchasing combat aircraft and the construction of a huge aviation complex in France, all in advance of American aviation involvement in the war. When Army Brig. Gen. Benjamin Foulois and the first wave of American aviators arrived unprepared, Mitchell confronted them by calling them an "incompetent lot of air warriors," a sentiment that bristled his new commander and fellow aviators alike.
At the same time, Mitchell observed Army Maj. Gen. Hugh Trenchard's British aviation tactics that convinced him of aircraft offensive abilities. Mitchell added to this belief a strategy of overwhelming force in combat aircraft numbers.
In September, Mitchell planned, organized and commanded 1,481 combat aircraft in the battle of St. Mihiel. During this battle, American aviators lead the offensive with interdiction, reconnaissance and, for the first time, strategic bombing of airfields, railway stations, bridges, ammunition dumps and troop concentrations. This proved to be air power's most successful operation during the war and galvanized in Mitchell's mind airpower offensive capabilities.
Following the war, Mitchell fully committed himself to an independent air force and aircraft as an offensive weapon system. He believed the war ended too soon and a larger global war was in the future.
But the U.S. Army and Navy officials viewed airpower as a purely support function. Despite looming military budget cuts, Mitchell voiced his concerns to no avail.
Frustrated, Mitchell took his complaints to newsprint when he wrote, "to entrust the development of aviation to either the Army or the Navy is just as sensible as entrusting the development of the electric light to a candle factory."
The Army sent Mitchell abroad in 1922 and 1923, possibly as a means to silence him.
He and his wife toured Hawaii, the Philippines, India, China and Japan. On his return to the states he outlined a very probable blue print of the next Pacific war.
The blue print included a first strike by a maturing Japanese air fleet.
The Army rejected his comments. This added fuel to his resolve, concern and outspokenness.
He embarked on a campaign that lead him before the Lampert committee, a Congressional subcommittee. Here Mitchell said, "It is a very serious question whether airpower is auxiliary to the Army and the Navy, or whether armies and navies are not actually auxiliary to airpower." Soon thereafter, the Army moved Mitchell out of Washington, D.C., to Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio.
Mitchell knew his career was over.
Instead of self pity, Mitchell turned to a subject more important to him: military readiness and airpower development prior to the next war.
During this time, the dirigible Shenandoah crashed killing 14 men. Three Navy aircraft crashed while attempting a crossing from San Francisco to Hawaii.
In both instances weather warnings and aircraft maintenance were largely ignored by Navy Headquarters. To Mitchell, the blame started at the top.
Mitchell called news reporters to make a statement that read, "These accidents are the result of the incompetency, the criminal negligence and the most treasonable negligence of our national defense by the Navy and War Departments."
Not surprisingly, Mitchell received court martial action on the grounds of "conduct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline and in a way to bring discredit upon the military service." Four months later, Mitchell resigned from the Army.
Billy Mitchell's courage and integrity lead to his stand for something bigger than himself.
This lead to a passion that grew larger than his own personal self-regard and eventually cost him his career.
http://law.jrank.org/pages/2858/Billy-Mitchell-Court-Martial-1925.html
Defendant: Brigadier General William Mitchell
Crime Charged: Insubordination and "conduct of a nature to bring discredit upon the military service"
Chief Defense Lawyers: Frank G. Plain, Frank Reid, and Colonel Herbert A. White
Chief Prosecutors: Major Allen W. Gullion, Lieutenant Joseph L. McMullen, and Colonel Sherman Moreland
Judges: Major General Charles P. Summerall, Chief of the U.S. Army General Staff; Major Generals William S. Graves, Robert L. Howze, Douglas MacArthur, Benjamin A. Poore, and Fred W. Sladen; Brigadier Generals Ewing E. Booth, Albert L. Bowley, George Irwin, Edward K. King, Frank R. McCoy, and Edwin B. Winans; and Colonel Blanton Winship
Place: Washington, D.C.
Dates of Court-Martial: October 28-December 17, 1925
Verdict: Guilty
Sentence: Suspension from rank, command, and duty with forfeiture of all pay and allowances for five years
SIGNIFICANCE: The Billy Mitchell court-martial demonstrated not only that a prophet is without honor in his own country but that he is particularly unwelcome in the military. The longest and most controversial court martial in U.S. history, it came to epitomize the difficulty military strategists have in adapting to changing times and technologies. The cost of the country's resultant unpreparedness for World War II lies beyond reckoning.
Nineteen-year-old William Mitchell enlisted in the Army in 1898, at the outbreak of the Spanish-American War. By World War I, he had realized the significance of the airplane, put himself through flying school at his own expense, risen to the rank of colonel, and was chief of Air Service. Seeing the Army using the airplane at first only for observation and, later, to shoot at enemy planes, he was perplexed that strafing and bombing never occurred to the men who ran the war. He proposed to General John J. Pershing that troops be dropped behind German lines by plane and parachute "in order so to surprise the enemy by taking him from the rear that it would give our infantry an opening." Pershing found the idea impossible and absurd.
By the war's end, Mitchell was convinced that "Only an air force can fight an air force." Soon he had trained the first paratrooper, used the airplane for aerial mapping, developed the turbo booster and the variable-pitch propeller, predicted high-altitude flight where the thin atmosphere would permit speeds of 300 to 400 miles per hour, and mounted cannons on planes—ordnance not flown again until, ironically, it was mounted on the B-25 Mitchell bomber (named for Billy Mitchell) for Colonel Jimmy Doolittle's daring bombing of Tokyo early in World War II.
Declaring in 1921 that "the first battles of any future war will be air battles," Mitchell became an outspoken critic of the government's failure to develop the Air Service. When the House Naval Affairs Committee refused to let him demonstrate air power by bombing former German ships that had to be destroyed under the Armistice agreement, he went public, earning so many headlines nationwide with his descriptions of Navy vessels as "sitting ducks" that the House Appropriations Committee approved his plan.
Read more: Billy Mitchell Court-Martial: 1925 http://law.jrank.org/pages/2858/Billy-Mitchell-Court-Martial-1925.html#ixzz0cc7iqn2y
Court Martial
Billy Mitchell:The Life, Times and Battles: pg. 206
"Mitchellism" (good header)
A letter from President Calvin Cooliage
"My Dear General Mitchell: Confirming m converstaion with you this morning, I do not know of any objection to your preparing some articles on aviation, so far as I am concerned. But, of course, I can not speak for your superior officers. The matter should be taken up with them and their decision in relation to the articles followed."
-Mitchell started as a general but was lowered to a private after his court martial
-he was known to have valor and discipline.
Quote from his sister (Ruth Mitchell) : "He died, our brother Bill his etiaph, I think, needs to be more than this: He was loyal, Never counting the capt."
-General Billy Mitchell foresaw many different individuals as having a natural appitude for flying: such as Edward vernon Richenbacker who was a racecar driver.
following used from:
http://encyclopedia.stateuniversity.com/pages/2814/Billy-Mitchell.html
"In France (Sep 1918) he commanded the largest concentration of aircraft (some 1500 warplanes) in aviation's brief history. In 1921 and 1923 he *energetically arranged for aircraft to demonstrate the potential of the new arm by sinking obsolete warships at sea, but unconvinced, the authorities continued to grade air power low on the priority list"
The father of the U.S. Air Force
(article used fromhttp:www.warren.af.mil/news/story.asp?id=123116182, The FE Warren Air force Base website)
Posted 9/19/2008//
by Michael Byrd
90th Missile Wing Historian
9/19/2008 - F.E. WARREN AFB, Wyo. -- As the Air Force moves back to basics, some service members may think of heritage, traditions and heroes. With respect and honor, most turn back the pages of time and look to the forefathers of the Air Force.
The accounts of their bravery remind people of the tradition they blazed: a tradition of courage and vision that created controversy and also inspired dreams.
Controversy, dreams and opinions made up the stormy career of the Air Force's first visionary, Army Brig. Gen. William 'Billy' Mitchell. From his first introduction to air power in 1906, he saw capabilities and strategies that most people in his time never imagined.
In 1910, Mitchell traveled overseas to review the Japanese, Chinese, Russian and Filipino armies. He returned after two years to Fort D.A. Russell, where he reported his findings to the Army Staff College. Mitchell pointed out the high probability of a United States war with Japan and the perilous defenses found in the Philippines.
His accounts were dismissed.
During World War I, Mitchell demonstrated both extraordinary administrative and war strategy skills. He first solved the problems of purchasing combat aircraft and the construction of a huge aviation complex in France, all in advance of American aviation involvement in the war. When Army Brig. Gen. Benjamin Foulois and the first wave of American aviators arrived unprepared, Mitchell confronted them by calling them an "incompetent lot of air warriors," a sentiment that bristled his new commander and fellow aviators alike.
At the same time, Mitchell observed Army Maj. Gen. Hugh Trenchard's British aviation tactics that convinced him of aircraft offensive abilities. Mitchell added to this belief a strategy of overwhelming force in combat aircraft numbers.
In September, Mitchell planned, organized and commanded 1,481 combat aircraft in the battle of St. Mihiel. During this battle, American aviators lead the offensive with interdiction, reconnaissance and, for the first time, strategic bombing of airfields, railway stations, bridges, ammunition dumps and troop concentrations. This proved to be air power's most successful operation during the war and galvanized in Mitchell's mind airpower offensive capabilities.
Following the war, Mitchell fully committed himself to an independent air force and aircraft as an offensive weapon system. He believed the war ended too soon and a larger global war was in the future.
But the U.S. Army and Navy officials viewed airpower as a purely support function. Despite looming military budget cuts, Mitchell voiced his concerns to no avail.
Frustrated, Mitchell took his complaints to newsprint when he wrote, "to entrust the development of aviation to either the Army or the Navy is just as sensible as entrusting the development of the electric light to a candle factory."
The Army sent Mitchell abroad in 1922 and 1923, possibly as a means to silence him.
He and his wife toured Hawaii, the Philippines, India, China and Japan. On his return to the states he outlined a very probable blue print of the next Pacific war.
The blue print included a first strike by a maturing Japanese air fleet.
The Army rejected his comments. This added fuel to his resolve, concern and outspokenness.
He embarked on a campaign that lead him before the Lampert committee, a Congressional subcommittee. Here Mitchell said, "It is a very serious question whether airpower is auxiliary to the Army and the Navy, or whether armies and navies are not actually auxiliary to airpower." Soon thereafter, the Army moved Mitchell out of Washington, D.C., to Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio.
Mitchell knew his career was over.
Instead of self pity, Mitchell turned to a subject more important to him: military readiness and airpower development prior to the next war.
During this time, the dirigible Shenandoah crashed killing 14 men. Three Navy aircraft crashed while attempting a crossing from San Francisco to Hawaii.
In both instances weather warnings and aircraft maintenance were largely ignored by Navy Headquarters. To Mitchell, the blame started at the top.
Mitchell called news reporters to make a statement that read, "These accidents are the result of the incompetency, the criminal negligence and the most treasonable negligence of our national defense by the Navy and War Departments."
Not surprisingly, Mitchell received court martial action on the grounds of "conduct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline and in a way to bring discredit upon the military service." Four months later, Mitchell resigned from the Army.
Billy Mitchell's courage and integrity lead to his stand for something bigger than himself.
This lead to a passion that grew larger than his own personal self-regard and eventually cost him his career.
The article above